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Show JU" THE SALT LAKE TIMES, MONDAY EVENING MAY, 26. 1890. 3 I new, temperance and 5s KLES FOR WOMEN 0,1 1 i, nf the Eeally Fashionable C City' 1 3K or two young women j l0Uld Newspaper Women Marry? H fcteresting Chit-Oh- at for p- - the Ladies. 3 be interesting news to most "H that there is right in the n ! of the uity a ?0JnP ete'y women's club house ' I fnWides for the gentler sex 1 Vcoinmodations, comforts 'i social amusements as gratify- - 1 heir tastes a the attrac- - to that their husbands and I 'doyat their various social dub crr a, 8 particular woman's organi-- H the Ladies' New York club, --J ''been thriving prosperously for M ix months under the guidance E, J terprisinr woman president, with ltre'l of a man to look after the money 1 vvben need be iu the capacity of 3 5eadquartera is the aeat Eng. r inl eoent brown stone front dwelling ington avenue, aVniost opposite T ,e of the late President Arthur. 'J ourstorv house, entirely unpre-- f!l externally, but it is safe to say 1 rejjnot in the whole town an- - ab house that is more cozy and J and its members claim that it 'El lid in this respect to the Alex- - J (ho woman's club of London, kI ;Uggested its establishment, and 1 Cities of which its officers have UI dupon. These officers are: Mrs. ss.l Wright Shelton, president; Mrs. H ibipman, recording secretary, and I s, Brown, treasurer. The latter ia on the Cotton exchange. I lab was started early last Novem- - ;tH jt the outset had a membership ' j t twenty-fiv- President Shelton ml it the idea of the club at that time . J afford to women of moderate iu who were living in the suburbs J if town altogether, a resort that duplicate the comfort and privacy rJ r own homes, where they could Ej a day or two while on a visit to '3 r without escort. It was to be 1 illy a hotel, but freed of the inci- - J iiitmniforts that make a public ' Wasteful to a woman, ne of those whimsical freaks of s r fancy that is the privilege of the x sex women of wealth took a sud-in- g to the notion of a woman's this sort, and in a month's time hundred of them had joined the id bad made it fashionable. To--. e club has a membership of about d members are being added at the U from three tb five daily. Of this r 200 are New York women, and, is more, the majority of the 200 irried. They go to the club often afternoons while their husbands c wntown. : club quarters are divided into a rant, parlors and reading rooms cture rooms and dormitories. The K rant is on the ground floor, tho 1 sand lecture rooms on the second and the dormitories occupy the rest building. It costs 520 a year in to belong to the club, and for the r a member can secure many privi- - Tliere is an English cook attached club, and he will furnish meals at me at restaurant prices to women nteud to go out to a matinee, and Id not like to eat at a restaurant, e luncheon parties of this sort are, ' I, one of the popular features of the Any lue mber who wants to go out iugcanget a special maid at the o accompany her. Out of town erswho are visiting the metropolis ran secure cab service and other nidations without the annoyance 'ther of hunting them up for "them- - president of the club resides in ilh llniUu an.l !. l.l. daytime and at night up to a real-s hour for the use of members, ranters living out of town rooms iwided at a cost of $1 per day. fstion has to be made for them a It is a custom for members iwntly bring their own maids with i nieals to order are provided staying there. accompanied by a member, can mnclison at restaurant prices, "wber who may desire to enter-f-f friends at a luncheon party can 1 private room c for this purpose, of members may be left at the we in care of nurses or guardians iver members want to go visiting. r service is provided; telegrams :ttrs. if addressed to any member (Club, are received and cared for, parcels, --New York Sun. and their mothers as well. Needy wo- men of previous good character, from tms city and county, are received for care. They receive the most skillful medical attendance, and are treated with a kindness and Christian charity which frequently save them from desperation and abandoned lives. This asylum is a home, not a prison. Its inmates are treated not only as hu- man beings, but as sisters-- not as crimi-nal- s. New York Press. . ', A Until Charity. The organizations for aiding the sick, this city are needy and helpless in generally deserving of confi-dence Among them is one and support. well inon to the public 2 tXrves to be in view of the good It is the Newport wo k l Infaut aUlum at Tenth avenue and cities have foundling umTwhichc.r,forahandonedtebies, "?S-vln- . aims to th. svstem Miss Potter can talk delighif the amenities and those sweet simX womanly ways that beauty to a girl. &e teil8 .Cb J, the Si 'T-t- h kind 0f reu to make, the kind of words to speak when foremen are abu-...v- e. comrades are unkind, emploversare unjust and friend, are false. She tells them how to stand, how to walk and how to breathe correctly; tells them how to keep their hands from getting and how to care for their hair BZ clothes, shoes, health and morals JOS Min,hia8i.ra Prey. graceful girl, and eyes, a sweet voice and a captivating little lisp in her speech. A little more interest of this sort from the refined young women of New York ?$sir Wo! f Two Wom. ! Potter, daughter of Bishop faea..00"8 lad-- v of q,liet ta3te re of iT'i aa c:'ruiing manners. .' , '"'sure is' devoted to the in-- t working Rids. With Miss ."isLe has charge of a division e Girls' elub in Newark, 'young ladies take turns as -". Miss Win gives talks ..U'onkinjr. housework, dress--JMiuc-and the purchase of if! "iie k'nnets, dress goods, wisdom of econorav. neat- - Where to Hide Tour Money. Women have always had curious ideas about where to keep money when travel-ing. I know one who traveled from New ork to Florida with 12,000 between the sole of her foot and her stocking, and she slept with her stockings on. Another one always pinned her money just inside her corsets, until she was told that if she fainted anywhere the first thing a good Samaritan would do would be to unloot- -n her bodice and slays, and then some wick ed Pharisee would discover the ducats and grab them. Since she has heard this she has taken to pinning the fortune to the back of her corsets, claiming that, even if she was taken ill, as she would be laid flat on her back, insensible or not, she would be sure of her treasure. Ex-change, : - When You Can Buy 4 Lots in Davis, Sharp & Stringer's A.ddition'P CORNER OF SECOND WEST AKD TENTH SOUTH, , v . On small Gash Payment, and within 80 days after Electric Car Line, . already commenced, on Second West, is completed, sell 3 Lots for Profit sufficient to build nn remaining Lot. i If you prefer to move into your own home today, - we have Six New Modern Style Houses just com- - plctcd, ' six Large Rooms, ' Fine Closets, Three Verandas, City Water, Elcgrant Location, close in, " ' splendid view, near electric car line, ONLY &1800 EACH, and Five Ykars to pay out at only 6 per cent interest. Don't Fail to see Watkins' Addition --A.djoin.in.g' UTsorty I'arls on ttao Solatia. DAVIS & STRINGER, Tthe 8SK Siot 23 West Second South. v w I I Railroafl Contractors and BniWers, Ellis, C nom "k'e: Grading, Ditching and Excavating, 121 S. & Main St. Street Grading a Specialty. Polmpr ESTIMATES FUHMSIIKD. ; ' COltltESPUSDESCE SOLICITED. -- EXCLUSIVE DEALERS IN - Sole Agents for James Means ni", Spencer & Kimball, ' ' 160 Main Street. SOUTH LAI ADDITiON. Now On the Market. LOCATION: Cor. Tenth South and Ninth East. ON THE CITY LIMITS TWO MILKS FROM P. O. LOTS FROM 100 TO SG00. THE SITUATION IS GRAND. Overlooking tha Valley. Call Early and Get Choice of Lots. CIIOICK KKMDKNCK. Bl'SI.NKS3 ANU AC'ltKA'JK WOl'KinX BURTON, lOEllCK & CO., Sole Agents, 269 S. Main St. Geo. M. Scott, JAs. Gmcndknuino, II. 8. IIcmfikld, President. Hecn-iary- . GEO. M. SCOTT & CO., . ; (INCORPORATED.) --DKALER8 IN-- Hardware and Metal, Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc. , AGLNTSFOK the Podge Wood Pulley. Koebliiijr's Steele Wire JUpe, Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Oils, Hercules Powder, AUm Engines and Boil ers, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Horse Whim, li.' ike Pumps Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Etc. 163 MAIN STREET. Salt Lake City, - : - Utah GEORGE A. LOWE, Dealer In All Kindt of Fint-Clas- s -- Agricu!tural Implements, KIIUTTLKKFAPM AND FIIKIOIH WA00N4 Columlius Bum iMons ai Road Carls i i ot every dww.TipUon. Steam Engines, Leflfel Wheels. WAREHOUGZP STATU U()A HKTW F.i-- liliST AXU HVX O.V1) SOLTII. ViE HANDLE Business, Resiieie anfl City Fnpty, Hnpro-7e-i and. TJniniproveA. Parties h.hinr to hnr or sell Kealt) better we u. Our u.ot'.s Siaall PruMs and quick 1 urn." Ormpondf-B- r Solicited. W.L BARRET & CO., 207 S. Main St., S!t Lake City, Itah. J Dtaii aud Montana MacMnery Company C. P. MASON, Manager. Headquarters for all Classes of Machinery, En"in- - anl Boiler from 3 li'iw jkt ana npwar! in txk for I main 'Hate delivery. BuaiaVumm, Injectors, lion Wtuau, Hoistiug Katrine I'ux k Breaker, Wall's IU1, Ingfrsoll Air Compressor nt brill, Lubri eating Oils, Mine, Mill nl Smeller Supplit, Silver, Gobi ant Coacentr itg Mills erected snd delivered in running order. ; Maine Office ail Warerpoms 259 S. Mail Street. Salt late 0. S. ! AGENCY. BUTTE, MONTANA. Getting Boady for Summer. Remember that these are the davs when the early hot iron, the insect now-dera- the napthaline cube and other discouragers catch the early grub or moth fly. Napthaline is a pretty white substance, one of the latter day rivals to camphor for making woolens and furs secure. An ounce of prevention for the next week, by scouring out all closets and thoroughly beating the woolen clothes that must still hang there, until May is established in warmth, will be worth pounds of camphor and fretting by and by. Use a stiff wing instead of a stick for scraping in any cracks there may be. Some of the chicken or pigeon wings that, dyed in masquerade colors, have done duty in hats, could be put to no better use than in these researches into insect life. Also, do a great deal of brushing about this time upon the clothes you wear. From the street one brings in on the clothes quantities of germinating dust, and a thorough shaking and beating out of a window of all articles of the day's wear should take place night or morn-ing, whichever is' most convenient. Clothes not only look better and wear better for this process, but it removes considerable actively mischievous dust from the house itself. Philadelphia Led-ger. A Rpld Telegrapher. Miss Kittie B. Stephenson, who won the first prize of $50 for the ladies' class in the telegraphic contest in New York, is said to he a hustler with a telegraphic key. She is only 13 years old, but the experience she has picked up during the last three years that she has been an operator has given her an unconscious confidence that is refreshing to behold. She has always been told that she was a very fast sender, but she didn't believe it. She entered the tournament to please her friends. She works in the city line department, and her fame as a sender extends to all branch offices in the citv. --New York Herald.. Women t the Capitol. You meet numerous women with claims in the Capitol corridors, and there are a couple of old ladies who have been here for a generation awaiting the settle-ment of a cotton claim. The claim is probly a just one, but congress does not get at it, and they will be in their graves before it is settled. Their faces were fresh when they came here. They are wrinkled now, and there are crows' feet at their eyes. They bring their knit-ting with them, and sit together in the galleries waiting and watching, and watching and waiting, session in and session out. Cor. New York Star. The lioyt' Stocking. ' Down on their knees, unmindful of the dirt, Tom, Joe and all the rest are happy playing marbles. . This is fun for the boys, but the stockings all out at the knees which greet the mother bring to her thoughts of mending and patching which but few enjoy. A writer in 's tells how these unsightly patches and darns .mav ha avniileil hv lrniftinx j ,.b new knees into the stockings. Unravel top and bottom of the rent until you have on each end a clear line of stitches, take up on a knitting needle the upper line; then pull tight the jagged edges on either side of the hole, and with a wors-ted needle and wool just sew them over very lightly and neatly, This done, you have a space to fill up, and you proceed to knit the row you have ready on your knitting needle until you have a flap of knitting done the exact size of the hole. Then take up on another needle the low-er row of. stitches, and knit it together with the upper row, on the inside of the stocking, just as if you were fastening off the toe of a' stocking. Once more thread your worsted needle and sew the sides of the flap, on the inside, to the sewn over jagged sides of the rent, and, instead of au ugly darn, you have an al-most imperceptible repair. She ffsi Smart. A rich St. Louis widow who was en-gaged to a wealthy attorney recently tried a peculiar scheme with success. She sent for her betrothed and asked him to sign an ante-nupti- contract al-lowing her to keep control of all her 'property. He refused point blank, and site declared the wedding off, accusing him of mercenary motives. She had seen somebody she liked better than the law-yer and wished to withdraw in such a way that he would not be likely to bring action for breach of promise. New York Telegram. "Sunaet" Hair Brought Out. Pontifical violet is to be worn still. It is uncommonly becoming to some wo-men, and they will, therefore, be sure to cultivate the color with assiduity. It also shows off the fashionable "sunset hair" to great perfection. There is to be a revival of magenta, too, so the tide seems setting toward the resurrection of bright tints. With a little toning down, magenta can be made rather nice, a sort of "ashes of roses shade." New York Journal. Three Stylish Spring BonneU. Pale blue and black is the favorite combination in hats and bonnets of the latest importation. Here are three of them: A wide brimmed hat of shirred lace, turned up at the back with an exquisite bow of pale blue gros grain ribbon, in the center of which is' a tiny bow of black velvet ribbon; drooping from this, all over the crown, are bunches of pale blue sweet peas, with black velvet bow on the brim in front. ' A Marie Stuart capote is of black braid, with fine wreath of pale forget-me-no- ts under tho edgo all around; a pert look-ing bow, of pale blue gros grain ribbon, stands on one side of the pointed front; there is a smaller bow or Knot ot riDoon at the back, from which depend the long ties of blue ribbon. A hat with projecting brim, narrow at the back, is of black open, work braid; the brim is faced with shirred pale blue crape; the crown is of black point d'es-pr- it over a puff of pale blue; at the back-i-s artistically arranged a bunch of beau-tiful, nodding, pale blue tips, from which depends a scarf, of the point d'esprit, a yard and a half long, to be wound about the neck and fastened on the left shoul-der. Ladies' Home Journal. President at Mount Holyoke. The interesting announcement is made that the vacant presidency of Mount Holyoke college, South Hadley, Mass.', has been offered to Mrs. Lizzie Mead, widow of Professor Hiram Mead, of Oberlin, and recently an instructress at the Abbott Female seminary, Andover. Her late husband went to his chair at Oberlin from the pastorate of the church in South Hadley. She is at present in Germany. Hartford Courant. TJIaeuse from Bd Teeth. ' I have seen "the riiost violent convul-sions caused by decaying teeth in a child's mouth; in fact, I do not eiaggerato in the least when I say that two-third- s of all the diseases which prey upon children from five to twelve years, and often longer, are the direct result of defective teeth, and could be entirely avoided by filling the teeth as rapidly as decay ap-peared. Interview in Good Housekeep-ing. - -" A Popular Dancer. Carmencita, the Spanish dancer who is the sensation of the hour, is enchanted with her American trip. And well she may be, for she is making plenty of money. Besides her regular engage-ment, she is in constant demand for pri-vate houses at $200 a night. By the way, her name is pronounced as though it wert, spelled Carmen-thct- New York Com-mercial Advertiser. Mrs. ruliion la Hunter. Three miles from Jacksonville, Fla., on a high bluff overlooking the St. John's river, and neaf enough to inhale the salt air from the Atlantic, stands the ancient historical house built by the Marquis de Talleyrand and once occu-pied bv the family of the famous French-man. "The pretty villa is nestled among magnolia and live oak trees, with a fleecy drapery of moss clinging to their mas-siv- e branches, while orange groves and pine forests are a part of the possessions. The traditional dwelling is now the winter home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Paulison. Mrs. Paulison, who has many friends in the Garden City, will be re-membered as Mrs. Annabel Wells Liggett, one of the most beautiful and accom-plished women of Detroit, and daughter of the Hon. Alfred Russell, di that .cfty. Mr Paulison is the son of the late Juds Paulison, of New Jersey. Mrs. Paulison la called the best lady shot in the south, aud, like her predecessor, the Marchioness, bunting costume on these expe-litkn- In the winter of 1888. white at Sanford.the lady cut off a coots head with a rifle at 200 yards, killed an eagle on the wing, and bagged thirty birds While on ber wed-lin- g her shotgun. uruey up, the Canadian for .to. to spend the weM it was her faacy she hunted side by side with fndians, who acknowledged J marvel as skill; so she was a rival hunter to the red men. It was an and her life original wedding journey, t v"" f ffl.tu.-Oo- r. Chiva.ro Inter Ocean. He;xlche from Vcllt. "A case of veil headache," said the physician, as the woman passed out. "Five cases of headache come to me now where there used to be one. And the spotted veil is the cause of it. The head-ache comes from the eyes, which are sure to be more or less affected by the con-tinual wearing of the dotted face veil pulled close over the eyes, as women wear it today. My patients come to me with one of those ridiculous little veils on and tell me that they have a constant headache with disturbed vision, and that they fear they shall have to wear glasses. But when I tell them they will only have to stop wearing the face veil they look hurt and tell me they are perfectly sure that the veil doesn't hurt them in the least, and that I don't quite understand the case. But then no physician, so far as a patient is convinced, ever did 'quite understand the case." New York Even-ing Sun. ' SholiI Newnpaper Women Harry? MM Newspaper Women Marry, ; Should They Marry Newspa-e- "as the weighty problem for '101 which occupied the time of 'omens Press club at their fort-- ? meeting, held at No. 24 Union ' 'Aboilt fifty women were on '""press opinions on the matter. 11 TynS resided and in-e- o flie speakers of the evening. 1, e,le8ts of the club were ey were Miss Elizabeth Bis Zt Lemovne Cowell, Mrs. Humphreys and Mrs. Merrill art). of The Boston Globe. ' .i? read the opening paper, ' Js strongly iu favor of afflrma-sw- s to both queries. Grace ' wxi voiced similar opinions, but 'tit ti Bla". who followed, eoftl marnaee narrowed the newspaper woman's work, nilf was ine to do her duty Ci n she would better re" Jirs. Eliza Putnam Heaton wownaend Percy also thought P"" men inade congenial life Trill "ew3PaPer women. New Sight Attn Thirty Yb. j A remarkable case of return of sight in one eye is reported from Waterbury, Conn. The lucky person is a John Mc- - J Donald, ased 74 He had Ic-e-n totally j blind for 30 years, having been rendered j 6o by eand unintentionally thrown in his j eyes by a friend. II is unabls toac--i count for his now good fortune, anil phy-- j sicians are also in a quandary to provide an explanation. lliiladelphia Ledger. A prominent English electrician af-- j firms the value of lightning conductors, j although they are not always reliable. ; Fe said that there is almost as much i danger of being hang?d for murder as teipg struck by |